Author: Seth Skydel

Seth Skydel has not set their biography yet
BOLT-Padlocks

BOLT Padlocks

STRATTEC Security Corporation has introduced its upgraded Padlock 2.0 featuring BOLT Breakthrough One-Key Lock Technology. BOLT’s Padlock 2.0 features a spring-loaded, chrome-plated 5/16-inch diameter hardened steel shackle inside a crush-resistant body shell. The Padlock 2.0 also includes an automotive-grade, stainless steel lock shutter that keeps out weather and debris. Designed for commercial and industrial applications, it features improved performance thanks to its double ball-bearing locking mechanism. The Padlock 2.0 also includes a six-plate tumbler sidebar that prevents picking and bumping. Breakthrough One-Key Lock Technology eliminates the need to carry extra keys or memorize combinations because the padlocks can be permanently programmed to lock and unlock using the vehicle’s ignition key. When drivers insert their ignition key into the padlock cylinder, spring-loaded plate tumblers move up and down until they are matched exactly to that key. The first time the key is rotated, the cylinder is uniquely coded to that key. When the key is removed, the cylinder moves into the locked position. When the key is turned again, it will rotate to the unlocked position. The BOLT Padlock 2.0 works with most GM, Ford and Dodge vehicles.

www.boltlock.com

300-Below

300 Below Brake Rotors

300 Below Inc. announced three new brake rotor lines: Dura-Life brake rotors, CryoRotors and TruBlue severe-duty brake rotors. Dura-Life is an entry-level product providing a rust inhibitor for the rotor and ABS ring. CryoRotor is the private label brake rotor available to buying groups and parts divisions that has been tested and shown to deliver double the life of standard brake rotors. The technology includes TruBlue severe-duty rotors that provide longer life for rotors and brake pads as well as extended ABS rust resistance.

www.300below.com

Management-Strategies-Web

Streamlining Choices

A valuable resource for utility fleet managers, the industry’s providers of rental and leasing services use their understanding of each fleet’s unique needs and objectives to match the most appropriate financing and acquisition strategies to particular operations.

For most fleets, a balance of ownership, rental and leasing is an effective choice. Utility Equipment Leasing Corporation (UELC) points out that understanding the benefits of those options is an effective way to run a fleet. Ownership is the clear choice for fleet managers, but gaps in fleet portfolios are a reality. Rental units maximize the immediate demand necessary to fill current gaps while leasing can be structured for longer-term, fixed and potentially lower payments that preserve capital for investment in a business and may not impact existing lines of credit. Depending on their structure, lease payments may offer a tax advantage and leasing can also avoid the risk of equipment obsolescence that comes with ownership through upgrade, trade-in and return provisions designed to provide flexibility.

In business since 1967, UELC provides utilities, municipalities, contractors and other fleets with a single source for their equipment rental and leasing needs. UELC has a complete rental fleet to meet daily, weekly, monthly or long-term needs. Late-model equipment in the nationwide rental operation averages 2.5 years old. This equipment is offered at a fixed cost without hidden charges for mileage or hours of use. The all-inclusive rental rate also includes maintenance for hassle-free utilization of the equipment. Customers are only responsible for fuel, lubricants and daily inspections to ensure safe operation.

Lease programs from the company include standard packages or customized solutions for long-term lease options toward the purchase of new or late-model equipment. Through DUECO Inc., a UELC sister company, Terex bucket trucks, digger derricks and cranes can be built to each fleet’s specifications. UELC structures financing programs for the equipment using capital, operating, municipal and split lease solutions.

Other UELC rental options include a rental purchase agreement that gives fleets the option to purchase or return the vehicle at any time during the term of the rental. This enables operations to test equipment prior to purchasing and to leverage the payments already incurred toward the purchase of the vehicle.

To learn more about UELC, visit www.uelc.com.

Empowering Solutions for Utility Fleets
When the cold winter winds whip across the prairie, folks there count on NorthWestern Energy to supply the gas and electricity they need to heat and light their homes. And the folks at this innovative and award-winning utility company count on ARI to help them manage a complex fleet of nearly 1,000 vehicles – from passenger cars and pickups to service vehicles to bucket trucks and digger derricks – ensuring vehicle readiness and reliability while providing up-to-date reporting, visibility, accountability and significant savings.

“We picked ARI because of the services they offered, their software and the way they managed vehicles,” said Ron Anderson, manager of fleet and equipment for NorthWestern Energy. Throughout its expansive service area, customers count on NorthWestern for dependable service – and ARI helps keep NorthWestern’s fleet on the road so the company can maintain its reputation for reliability.

The relationship dates back to 1995, when ARI began providing fueling and maintenance services for a South Dakota utility that NorthWestern later acquired. As NorthWestern grew into the company it is today, its relationship with ARI grew. Today, ARI provides a comprehensive range of fleet services for NorthWestern, including accident management for leased vehicles, licensing and title management, fuel management, renewal management, fleet administration, preventive maintenance and more.

“NorthWestern is a growing company, and we’re always looking for ways to support them, whether by reducing fleet-related costs or by helping make sure their vehicles are always ready for the road,” said Rob Hoysgaard, a utility fleet expert at ARI.

Recognized by Forbes as one of the nation’s 100 most trustworthy companies, and a five-time winner of the utility industry’s prestigious ServiceOne Award, NorthWestern operates in 121,000 square miles spread across Montana, Nebraska and South Dakota. For vehicle maintenance, the company often relies on vendors throughout the area, in towns large and small. In-house mechanics can’t always check up on shops in outlying towns. As a result, it can be difficult to ensure that preventive maintenance is done on schedule and to maintain high quality standards. To address this issue, ARI recently implemented its Garage Management System (GMS) application, customizing it to meet NorthWestern’s needs.

“We took a look at the system and said, ‘What if …?’” said Anderson. ARI responded by streamlining the process of opening and closing work orders, eliminating functionality not essential to NorthWestern’s operation, like scheduling, and making other changes to reflect the way NorthWestern works. ARI customizes all of its technology solutions in this fashion to meet clients’ needs.

A part of ARI’s Integrated Fleet Solution, the Web-based GMS combines maintenance data from internal and external sources for more efficient, accurate, up-to-date reporting and – ultimately – lower operating costs. It feeds cost information into the ARI insights system and tracks parts.

The GMS increases productivity, streamlining the maintenance process by helping the company manage technicians, vehicle preventive maintenance schedules, unscheduled repairs and parts inventories, while consolidating all vendor-in/vendor-out data with other fleet activities.

Using ARI insights, NorthWestern can capture all vehicle activity, including new vehicle delivery, licensing renewal, IFTA/IRP, DOT and ANSI inspections, accident repairs, and used vehicle removal and remarketing. The ARI fuel management program automatically captures fuel transactions and uploads them within 24 hours. All the company’s fleet information is available on the secure ARI portal – vehicles, preventive maintenance fuel costs and more.

“When I open the ARI website, I can take a look at the alerts we’ve established, look at fuel costs on an ongoing or monthly basis. It’s very helpful for my budgeting,” said Anderson. “If someone calls me about maintenance, I can put in the vehicle number and the information is all there – the last service, what was done. When we get ready to sell, if we take the vehicle to a local auction, we can print out a complete record from the day the vehicle came into the system.”
The site is easy to navigate and customize. Most important, NorthWestern can use ARI insights to improve operations, enhance productivity and, ultimately, reduce costs – and that all supports a better bottom line.

ARI is committed to its partners’ success, and it demonstrates that commitment every day. Robb Zavitz, ARI’s Minneapolis-based account manager, is often in touch with NorthWestern. Dave Robinson, the account coordinator, provides a daily single point of contact within ARI to ensure that everything is working smoothly. Jerry Allen, an ARI regional manager, served NorthWestern from 1995 until he retired from ARI in December 2009. That longevity is unusual in fleet management, but typical for ARI. In fact, most of the ARI team has more than 20 years of vocational fleet experience.

Whether it’s handling the paperwork for licensing and titling in every county in the three states where NorthWestern has operations, or providing insight into vehicle specifications, ARI does what it takes.

“If we have a question on specs, we can go to one person at ARI, and it gets taken care of,” said Anderson. Once the company, which has a contract with a vehicle manufacturer, finalizes the specs, ARI handles the ordering and then provides updates on the status of production and delivery, including everyone from the chassis manufacturer to the upfitters of bucket trucks or digger derricks. When it’s time to look at replacements, NorthWestern relies on a unique vehicle replacement analysis model (VRAM) designed to save maintenance dollars and ensure that mission-critical vehicles remain up and running. In addition to age and mileage, VRAM incorporates maintenance costs, model year, criticality and other factors that impact life cycle – all based on data already in the ARI insights system. VRAM then ranks each vehicle in the fleet for replacement priority.

“We can tell you which vehicle is No. 1 for replacement, and which is 956,” Anderson said. A faster, more accurate vehicle replacement model delivers value by helping companies like NorthWestern optimize their assets, lower their cost of ownership and ensure that mission-critical vehicles are available when they need them.

For more information, visit www.arifleet.com.

Expert Advice
Each fleet has unique financing needs, notes PHH Arval, a provider of fleet management services. At the company, consultants work with fleets to tailor lease financing to meet needs while also making sound economic sense. Among the many variables considered are the expected service life of vehicles, current interest rates, and a company’s risk profile and business culture.

PHH offers multiple fleet lease structures to best meet each operation’s requirements. Included are fixed or floating rates, open or closed-end leases, and self-funding or bank plan options.

PHH integrates its experience with information provided by vehicle manufacturers, safety-rating agencies, and its own data to help select and order fleet vehicles appropriate to each set of needs. Online tools make it easy to perform side-by-side comparisons of fleet vehicles, and analyze life-cycle costs based on replacement policies.

PHH also offers a pool of fleet vehicles ready for immediate delivery and an out-of-stock vehicle locator system, which finds vehicles in existing dealer inventories.

For more information, visit www.phharval.com.

EUFMC-Web

Past & Present

Held annually since 1953, the Electric Utility Fleet Managers Conference (EUFMC) remains true to tradition while staying at the forefront when it comes to providing highly valuable and relevant information.

“EUFMC brings together a large cross-section of utilities from around the country, large and small, for one common cause – to gain knowledge from the presented programs, from each other, to view products and to interact with the utilities’ supplier base,” said Ron Anderson, manager, fleet and equipment at NorthWestern Energy. “In no other place do you find such in-depth knowledge for fleet managers.”

That is by design, notes George Survant, director of fleet services at Florida Power & Light and current EUFMC president. “EUFMC is unique in that it’s built on the guidance of professionals from within the industry it serves,” he said. “The result is an event featuring technical and management presentations that helps fleet managers make a difference in their organizations.”

EUFMC continues to attract record numbers of fleet executives from investor-owned electric utilities, electric cooperatives and electrical contractors from across the U.S. and Canada, as well as representatives of equipment and service suppliers. The annual exhibition of the latest utility equipment and services during the conference features more than 75 displays where fleet managers can meet with 250+ representatives from more than 95 manufacturers and service providers.

Close Cooperation
Since its inception, EUFMC has promoted close cooperation between fleet representatives and manufacturers.

“The Electric Utility Fleet Managers Conference is an annual opportunity for the leaders in our company to share product ideas and technical information with leaders in the electrical utility fleet industry,” said James Christian, director of engineering at Time Manufacturing Company. “The multifaceted environment of the conference allows our company to show products in a unique drive-through format, participate in technical sessions and have one-on-one interaction with our customers. This is not just a ‘salesman’ show as engineers, like myself, are encouraged to attend and participate in the technical programs and roundtable discussions.”

Each year, EUFMC’s officers and board of directors put together a comprehensive program of technical presentations that includes fleet managers, suppliers and industry experts who address the topics that are most relevant to attending fleets. The 2012 program, “Essential Tools for Utility Fleet Professionals,” features presentations on the following topics:

Industry Trends – Light Duty Vehicles
Jim Michon, Ford
Tom Nimmo, Utilimarc
Craig Neuber, ARI

Life Cycle Costs – Models that Work
Chris Shaffer, Utilimarc
Steve Granger, KCP&L
Mike Radziewicz, ComEd
Cliff Edwards, Pike Electric

Best Practices in Preventive Maintenance
Jack Abraham, Nova Scotia Power

Diesel Engines – Current and Future
Dave Bryant, Freightliner
Tim Shick, Navistar

GPS/AVL – Looking for ROI
Alan Riddle, SCE
Craig Stepien, FP&L
Tim Mooney, PHH
Tim Taylor, Telogis

Regulatory/Legislative Update
Bill Van Amburg, CALSTART
Pat O’Connor, Kent & O’Connor
Josh Chard, Altec Industries

Battling the Scales – Bridge Law Compliance
Mike Allison, Duke Energy
Bill Hall, Minnesota Power
Joe Caywood, Terex

PM Practices & Technician Training Survey Results
EUFMC attendees have indicated a high level of interest in the practices that utilities are following in regard to preventive maintenance (PM), testing of aerial equipment and training of fleet technicians. Topics on the survey include PM and dielectric and acoustic emissions testing practices, management information system and data use, warranty work and claims processing, and technician training and apprentice programs. During the 2012 conference, results of the EUFMC survey on PM practices and technician training will be presented.

Guest Speakers
Other valuable aspects of EUFMC continue to attract attendees, including guest speakers who share important perspectives. This year’s keynote speaker is Jim Stanley, senior vice president of power delivery for Duke Energy’s U.S. Franchised Electric & Gas business. A 35-year industry veteran, Stanley is responsible for the electric power transmission and distribution in a five-state service area. Duke Energy provides electricity and natural gas to approximately 4 million customers in the Carolinas and the Midwest, and distributes natural gas in Ohio and Kentucky.

Also on the agenda at EUFMC 2012 are two dinner speakers:

Top Gun – Major Dan Rooney, U.S. Air Force (Ret.), will address EUFMC attendees on June 5. A former F-16 pilot in the Oklahoma Air National Guard, the decorated military aviator served three combat tours in Iraq and was a two-time recipient of the Top Gun award. Rooney is also the founder of the Folds of Honor Foundation, a nonprofit organization that provides scholarships to the spouses and children of military service members disabled or killed in action.

Industry Leader – Bob Lutz, the driving force behind many vehicle advancements in a nearly 50-year career in the automotive industry, will be the guest speaker at the EUFMC President’s Gala Dinner on June 6. Lutz is currently a member of the board of directors of VIA Motors. Until his retirement in 2010 he served as vice chairman and special adviser, design and global product development at General Motors, where he championed the development of the Chevrolet Volt. Lutz has also held senior leadership positions at Ford, Chrysler and BMW, and was CEO of Exide Technologies.

Best Practices
The sharing of best practices is a hallmark of EUFMC. The conference provides a forum where fleet representatives can exchange information and discuss mutual concerns, including the highly popular fleet and supplier roundtables.

“As a first-year fleet manager, I attended the 2011 Electric Utility Fleet Managers Conference and found the networking opportunities hugely beneficial,” said Michael Radziewicz, director of fleet at ComEd. “The best part of EUFMC for my company is the opportunity it provides for me to meet my peers and talk about issues that we are all dealing with and hear how they are addressing them. On a number of occasions since the conference, I’ve called other fleet managers I met to bounce ideas off of them and learn from their experience.”

“The 2011 Electric Utility Fleet Managers Conference was my first and I was very impressed with the depth of technical information that was presented, the value that can be found in the experience of the attendees and the relationships that can be built with other fleet managers,” stated Keith Dunkel, team leader at Indianapolis Power & Light Company, Facilities & Transportation Fleet. “At EUFMC I met people who are dealing with the same challenges that we have and who are willing to share their solutions to common fleet management issues, during and after the conference. The sponsors do a wonderful job of supporting the event and its great sense of tradition. I have not been to any other conference with the quality of EUFMC.”

The 60th Electric Utility Fleet Managers Conference will be held June 2-5, 2013, at the Williamsburg Lodge and Conference Center in Williamsburg, Va. For more information, visit www.eufmc.com.

 

Green-Fleets-Web

Advanced Technology

It is a case of mutual interests combining resources and expertise, says Matt Gilliland, fleet services manager at Nebraska Public Power District (NPPD). “In 2006 to 2007, when Chevrolet was researching and developing the technology it would eventually use in the Chevrolet Volt,” he explained, “the OEM wanted to partner with utility fleets to deploy vehicles and evaluate their performance and function in actual operations.”

The result was an extensive program managed by the Electric Power Research Institute (EPRI), the nonprofit center for electricity and environmental research, that put demonstration Volt models on the road at 64 U.S. and Canadian utilities. For the three-year demonstration project, which officially began in 2011, NPPD is operating one of those vehicles.

NPPD supplies power in 91 of 93 Nebraska counties to communities as well as rural public power districts and electric cooperatives. Supporting its generation, transmission and distribution businesses is a fleet of 1,150 pieces of equipment ranging in size from ATVs to 140-ton cranes. Included are SUVs, pickups and vans, and a range of medium- and heavy-duty trucks.

The collaborative effort between EPRI, General Motors and NPPD is evaluating a 2011 Chevy Volt. The demonstration project will work to ensure safe and convenient electric vehicle charging, raise public awareness and understanding of plug-in electric vehicles, assist electric utilities in determining the support for charging vehicles and help public policy leaders better understand how electricity can be used as a vehicle fuel source. The program is made possible in part by a $30.5 million grant administered by the U.S. Department of Energy’s Recovery Act Transportation Electrification Initiative.

Equipped with a 120-kW electric motor that is equivalent to a 150-HP engine, the electric-powered, extended-range vehicle can travel approximately 35 miles on a full charge. After the battery is depleted, the onboard 80-HP gasoline engine and generator can power the Volt for an additional 372 miles for a total cruising range of 407 miles.

Working its way across Nebraska as a fleet vehicle, the Volt at NPPD is being used at 42 company locations in a variety of environments and under differing weather conditions. Data on the vehicle being supplied to EPRI will be included in aggregate results from all 64 utilities taking part in the project. In addition to performance information from onboard data capture devices, the utilities are helping determine charging and circuit-loading patterns and electric charging infrastructure readiness.

Behind NPPD’s participation in the demonstration project is the utility’s Domestic Energy Research and Application Initiative, which has funds for developing technologies related to environmental issues. “We’ve funded programs for energy research with the University of Nebraska, wind monitoring and carbon capture,” Gilliland noted, “so it made sense to leverage our resources to look into advanced vehicle technology as well. One of the benefits of this program was that by getting involved, we had access to some of the first Volts to come off the production line.

“One of the biggest benefits of the demonstration project,” Gilliland continued, “was that we formed a strong industry partnership where information flowed both ways. That will help us determine if this technology is right for our operation and our customers at the right cost.”

As for the Chevy Volt, Gilliland says it has done everything it was supposed to do. “It’s a great platform,” he stated. “This is one of the biggest advances in automotive technology in many years.”

HYBRID SOLUTIONS

Terex HyPower
The California Air Resources Board (CARB) has approved the Terex HyPower hybrid system for use in any power takeoff-equipped diesel-powered truck application with a gross vehicle weight rating (GVWR) of more than 10,000 pounds. This means the HyPower hybrid system meets the strict emissions requirements for anti-idling in the state of California, which many other states have adopted for fleets that are bidding on projects or requesting project funding.

CARB’s approval of the Terex HyPower hybrid system allows contractors and fleets to purchase new trucks with the system or retrofit older trucks. The Terex HyPower hybrid system enables job site operations without requiring the engine to be running, reducing harmful exhaust emissions and noise and lowering fuel use. According to Terex, the system can save up to 1,500 gallons of fuel per year based on 7,000 miles per year and 1,250 job site hours per year.

Visit www.terexhypower.com for more.

Altec
CARB has approved the Altec Jobsite Energy Management System (JEMS) when used in any power takeoff (PTO), diesel-fueled truck application with a GVWR of more than 10,000 pounds. Altec JEMS is a product of Altec’s Green Fleet, designed to eliminate engine idle time at the job site and reduce fuel consumption, noise and emissions. JEMS is an integrated plug-in system powered by application-specific battery packs. The system provides power for aerial devices, truck cab heating and air conditioning, and export power for hand tools and other electrical accessories.

Visit www.altec.com/green-fleet.php for more.

Eaton
Eaton Corporation has published a fact sheet on hybrid electric power systems for commercial trucks to help fleets determine whether the technology is the correct platform for their operations. The document covers applications, job site operation time, stop densities, vehicle speeds, driving techniques, warranty information and more. It also lists key specification information. More than 5,500 Eaton hybrid systems are in use today on utility vehicles and other commercial applications, and have collectively accumulated more than 200 million miles of service.

Visit www.roadranger.com for more.

Odyne Systems
Odyne Systems LLC has completed five plug-in hybrid vehicles funded by a U.S. Department of Energy development project and has delivered the vehicles to customers of DUECO Inc., the final stage truck manufacturer. Companies receiving the new technology include:
• Choptank Electric Cooperative, a Touchstone Energy Cooperative, which took delivery of a plug-in hybrid bucket truck with a Terex HR42M aerial device to be used in maintenance of electric lines;
• Consumers Energy, the principal subsidiary of CMS Energy, which took delivery of a plug-in hybrid utility truck with a Terex 5FC55 aerial device;
• NiSource, which took delivery of a plug-in hybrid bucket truck with a Terex TL41 aerial device for use in maintenance and construction of its electrical grid;
• NV Energy, which took delivery of an underground utility vehicle featuring a Vanair underdeck compressor for maintenance of an underground natural gas infrastructure; and
• Pepco Holdings Inc., which took delivery of a plug-in hybrid underground utility vehicle with a Vanair underdeck compressor for underground gas infrastructure maintenance.

Odyne has also delivered seven trucks featuring its plug-in hybrid propulsion system to utilities and municipalities throughout Wisconsin. Communities and utilities receiving the new technology were partially funded under the Wisconsin Clean Transportation Program jointly administered through the Wisconsin State Energy Office and the U.S. Department of Energy Wisconsin Clean Cities Program. The new units are anticipated to deliver 50 percent better fuel efficiency than a conventional truck annually, depending upon use.

Receiving vehicles with the Odyne hybrid systems is Milwaukee County, which took delivery of four work trucks that will be used to maintain traffic signals and street lighting. The vehicles feature the first Odyne hybrid systems installed on Kenworth truck chassis and are the first to power Venturo corner mount cranes. The trucks also have fiberglass bodies and Terex TL60 aerials.

Marshfield Utilities, serving the city of Marshfield, Wis., took delivery of a Navistar truck fitted with the Odyne system and a Terex HRX55 boom for use in construction and maintenance of the Marshfield utility grid. The Richland Center and Lake Mills units of Wisconsin Public Power Inc. will also be putting new Navistar chassis with Terex TCX60 booms and the Odyne hybrid system in service for the construction and maintenance of utility grids.

Odyne’s proprietary hybrid technology combines electric power conversion, power control and energy storage technology with Remy electric propulsion motors, modular Johnson Controls lithium-ion battery systems and other automotive components.

Visit www.odyne.com for more.

BAE Systems
The BAE Systems HybriDrive parallel system for Class 6, 7 and 8 vocational trucks is a scalable design that can be modified for a range of truck platforms, vocations and duty cycles. HybriDrive parallel is based on a motor/generator integrated between the engine and the transmission and an energy storage system, coupled with electronic controls. The system’s battery pack and electronics are sealed for under-vehicle environments.

Visit www.baesystems.com for more.

NATURAL GAS

Venchurs Vehicle Systems
Venchurs Vehicle Systems (VVS) is showcasing its new CNG and bi-fuel conversions for Ford F-250/350 trucks. The Venchurs CNG program includes dedicated CNG and bi-fuel systems that allow for seamless switching of the fuel supply and offer a range of up to 650 miles. VVS has built a CNG Search & Rescue Ford F-250 concept truck with its bi-fuel system for pilot program demonstrations by national park rangers. Each CNG conversion will be performed at the Venchurs’ conversion facility in Adrian, Mich.

Visit www.venchursvehicles.com for more.

Freightliner Custom Chassis
Freightliner Custom Chassis Corporation (FCCC), a subsidiary of Daimler Trucks North America LLC, has introduced its S2G chassis, a factory-installed liquid propane gas engine available in medium-duty trucks. The front-engine chassis utilizes a Freightliner M2 cab and has a GVWR of 33,000 pounds. Standard specs include an Allison 2300 automatic transmission with PTO provision.

The S2G’s 8-liter, 325-HP engine supplied by Powertrain Integration uses General Motors’ long block and other engine components. FCCC partnered with Powertrain Integration and CleanFUEL USA in the development of the S2G. A limited preproduction run of the S2G chassis is expected in the fourth quarter of 2012, with full production slated for the first quarter of 2013.

Visit www.freightlinerchassis.com for more.

Ram Truck
Ram Truck has introduced a factory-built CNG pickup. The Ram 2500 Heavy Duty CNG model is powered by the 5.7-liter Hemi V-8 and is equipped with both compressed natural gas tanks and an 8-gallon gasoline fuel tank. Canadian customers can opt for a 35-gallon gasoline tank. The CNG tanks provide a gasoline gallon equivalent of 18.2 gallons. If the CNG tanks are emptied, the vehicle will automatically switch to gasoline. CNG-only range is estimated to be 255 miles, while the backup supply of gasoline extends the range to 367 total miles.

The Ram 2500 CNG system uses a Hemi engine that has been modified to run on compressed natural gas as well as gasoline. Redesigned cylinder heads with specifically designed CNG-compatible valves and valve-seat materials allow the engine to burn both fuels. The engine also has a second, CNG-specific fuel rail and set of injectors, and a new powertrain control module that allows the Hemi to operate on either of the two fuel sources. In use the system is automatic. A small amount of gasoline is used during engine startup before the Ram CNG runs exclusively on compressed natural gas.

Visit www.ramtrucks.com for more.

General Motors
General Motors has announced details of its 2013 bi-fuel Chevrolet Silverado and GMC Sierra 2500HD extended cab pickup trucks. GM bi-fuel pickups are equipped with a CNG-capable Vortec 6.0L V-8 engine that transitions between CNG and gasoline fuel systems. Combined, the systems offer a range of more than 650 miles. The Silverado and Sierra will be available in standard and long box models, with either two- or four-wheel-drive systems.

Visit www.gmfleet.com for more.

Westport Innovations
Westport Innovations has announced that its Westport LD division’s WiNG Power System is being based on Ford’s new 6.2L hardened engine platform. Ford F-250 and F-350 pickups with the bi-fuel system run on natural gas or gasoline. WiNG Power Systems will be installed at the company’s manufacturing facility adjacent to the Ford Kentucky Truck Plant in Louisville.

Visit www.westport.com for more.

ELECTRIC

Motiv Power Systems
Motiv Power Systems has received a California Energy Commission grant of $1.16 million for an assembly line pilot run of four electric truck chassis in partnership with Detroit Chassis. The Motiv Electric Powertrain Control System (ePCS), which provides a 100-mile range, will be demonstrated in shuttle bus applications.

Motiv’s ePCS works with a wide range of batteries and motors. Through its intelligent software control algorithms, Motiv’s ePCS actively manages power flow between all electrical components in the vehicle. It also captures and wirelessly broadcasts data to the Motiv cloud for monitoring and analysis. Factors such as battery charge and vehicle status provide detailed real-time analytics to support fleet operators in preventive maintenance.

Visit www.motivps.com for more.

ALTe
ALTe Powertrain Technologies has installed its powertrain system in a second line of vehicles, the Ford Econoline E-350 platform. ALTe has already implemented conversions in Ford F-150 trucks. Road tests reveal that the E-350 cutaway chassis prototype can drive approximately 25 miles in an all-electric mode and then deliver nearly 15 mpg in a charge-sustained mode. These performance levels should continue to improve, ALTe noted, as it incorporates production level components and refines engineering algorithms. The company is delivering the E-350 prototype to its first potential fleet customer for evaluation and plans to build more prototypes for customer evaluations throughout the year. The company is targeting a spring 2013 product launch date for the U.S. market.

Visit www.altept.com for more.

Protean
Protean Electric is offering Protean Drive, an electric drive in-wheel motor system for existing light-duty vehicles. According to the company, the system can be easily integrated into a broad range of vehicles and can increase fuel economy by more than 30 percent depending on the size of the battery and the driving cycle.

Protean’s solution uses in-wheel motors that can deliver 81 kW (110 HP) and 590 pounds per feet, yet weigh only 68 pounds and are sized to fit within the space of a conventional 18- to 24-inch road wheel. Protean Drive regenerative braking capabilities allow up to 85 percent of the available kinetic energy to be recovered during braking. The system can be used on front-, rear- or four-wheel-drive vehicles that run on gas, diesel or other gaseous fuels such as CNG.

Visit www.proteanelectric.com for more.

VIA Motors
VIA Motors has announced it will collaborate with telecom provider Verizon to develop plug-in electric work vehicles using VIA’s proprietary extended-range electric vehicle (eREV) technology. eREV vehicles have up to 40 miles of all-electric range using lithium-ion batteries and the capability to drive unlimited additional miles using VIA’s onboard electric generator or range extender. In independent testing, VIA’s eREV pickup trucks have demonstrated up to 100 miles per gallon in typical fleet driving, according to the company. In addition, Verizon anticipates utilizing the onboard generator and power export option to power work tools or even provide power to its network in an emergency.

Visit www.viamotors.com for more.

ENGINES

Daimler Certifies Complete Vehicle Lineup
Daimler Trucks North America (DTNA) has announced that the U.S. Environmental Protection Agency (EPA) has certified its complete portfolio of model year 2013 on-highway, vocational and medium-duty vehicles as fully compliant with the new greenhouse gas 2014 (GHG14) regulations. DTNA’s GHG14 compliance has been achieved one full year ahead of the mandate for certification by the EPA and the U.S. Department of Transportation’s National Highway Traffic Safety Administration’s program to reduce heavy- and medium-duty truck greenhouse gas emissions.

Visit www.daimler-trucksnorthamerica.com for more.

Hino Trucks Honored at National Biodiesel Conference
Hino Trucks has been recognized by the National Biodiesel Board with the 2012 Eye on Biodiesel Impact Award. The company was nominated for the award for supporting the use of B20 biodiesel blends and for becoming the first manufacturer to support the use of B20 biodiesel blends in a hybrid-electric truck, as well as in its complete product line of Class 6 and 7 trucks.

All 2011 and later model conventional trucks powered by Hino’s proprietary J-Series engines are approved to use B20 biodiesel blends that contain biofuel blend stock (B100) compliant to ASTM D6751, and blended fuel compliant to ASTM D975. B20 biodiesel meeting these standards is also approved for use in Hino’s newly announced diesel and diesel-electric hybrid cabovers due to enter the market this summer.

Visit www.hino.com for more.

Maintenance-Web

Green Shops

Nicor Gas
Nicor Gas, headquartered in Naperville, Ill., is one of the nation’s largest gas distribution companies. Owned by Nicor Inc., a holding company, Nicor Gas serves 2 million customers in a service territory that encompasses most of the northern third of Illinois, excluding Chicago.

“We look at environmental compliance as an opportunity for continuous improvement,” said Jeff Price, manager, fleet operations at Nicor Gas. “We are always seeking out best practices and applying them whenever feasible. For example, as shop equipment becomes dated, we look at the environmental benefits as well as the functionality of replacement technologies.”

Servicing approximately 2,000 units, Nicor’s fleet management department operates five large maintenance facilities and seven satellite shops throughout northern Illinois. The department has a total staff of 57, including 47 hourly employees who are directly involved in maintenance operations, and eight management personnel.

Price related that Nicor Gas has constructed a new maintenance facility that opened in December 2009 and that the utility is building another new shop that was scheduled for completion by the end of 2011. “In these locations,” he said, “we have several environmentally friendly features, and our goal is to have the structures certified as energy efficient. To achieve that, among other things, we have included prism sunroofs, high-efficiency fluorescent lighting, radiant floor heating and variable speed exhaust systems in the design. We are also moving away from chemical solvent tanks to hot water alternatives, and we’re using recycled glycol products, and are considering a similar program for our base engine oil products to the extent one is available.

“When it comes to ensuring compliance with environmental regulations,” Price continued, “our environmental, health and safety department does an excellent job inspecting our sites. We also stay abreast of changes through our alliances with vendors, associations and best practice seminars. If a change is identified, we take steps to handle these in a timely, efficient and economical manner.”

One way that Nicor Gas is meeting the challenge of addressing changes in and ensuring compliance with environmental regulations is through annual compliance training, monthly formal updates and refreshers in the form of tailgate meetings. “We take the training of our employees seriously and will continue to do so,” Price stated. “Occasionally, we look to outside sources to keep our techniques fresh and up to date.”

Price goes on to say that there is no single challenge when it comes to environmental compliance and initiatives in shop operations. “It’s more like managing the changing landscape and seeing that best practices are followed correctly,” he concluded. “We also try to follow the examples set in our communities. Many of our shop locations are in forward-thinking areas, and we want to be a good partner to these municipalities. It is our neighborhood, too, and it is the right thing to do.”

Central Hudson Gas & Electric
Central Hudson Gas & Electric Corporation, a regulated transmission and distribution utility headquartered in Poughkeepsie, N.Y., serves approximately 376,000 residential and business customer locations in eight counties of New York’s Mid-Hudson River Valley. Its 2,600-square-mile electricity and natural gas service territory extends from the suburbs of metropolitan New York City north to the state capital in Albany.

“We are constantly working to be sure we are complying with all environmental regulations,” said John McCormack, transportation foreman at Central Hudson Gas & Electric. “At the forefront of that effort is the annual hazcom training for our maintenance staff and instructional training for new employees on the use of equipment designed to help us protect the environment.”

The environmental compliance training that McCormack describes is now taking place at Central Hudson Gas & Electric’s six repair facilities. Included in the fleet’s maintenance operation is one main truck garage where all major inspections and repairs on trucks, buckets, diggers, backhoes and tractors are performed. There are also five district garages for major work and maintenance on light-duty vehicles. All of the facilities handle repairs on vehicles that are driven in and make road calls for breakdowns.

“We’re especially focused on managing the waste stream at our facilities,” McCormack stated. “Our shops no longer have any floor drains to allow anything to go into a storm drain. In addition, we’re making sure that engine and hydraulic oils, antifreeze, and used filters and tires are all being disposed of properly. We use only qualified contractors to handle that removal, and all of our vendors are registered and comply with all environmental regulations.”

Central Hudson Gas & Electric’s shops are equipped to properly and safely handle waste materials. In the truck garage there is a 500-gallon waste tank with an evacuation system to empty portable oil drain buggies and pans. The tank has an automatic alarm and shutoff to alert the staff when it is nearly full, and it will not accept oil when it is full. In the district garages there are 275-gallon waste oil tanks, which are now being converted to double wall models, and 55-gallon barrels for used filters and antifreeze.

“There are clearly benefits to all of our environmental compliance initiatives,” McCormack concluded. “A safer environment is better for our company, our employees and the communities we serve.”

Editor’s Note: Case studies on these pages have been supplied by FleetAnswers, a membership-driven Intelligent Fleet Community that connects fleet managers with industry peers, and provides tools to help improve operations, industry-specific benchmark data, and information on current trends and issues. For more case studies and other resources, visit www.fleetanswers.com.

Diagnostics Information
Mitchell 1, a Snap-on company, and Noregon Systems, a vehicle communications solutions supplier, announced an agreement to develop an interface between Mitchell 1’s Repair-Connect.net and Noregon’s JPRO Commercial Fleet Products. The new interface will enable Noregon to capture and pass a vehicle identification number (VIN) and diagnostic trouble code (DTC) into Mitchell 1’s Repair-Connect.net application. According to the companies, instantaneously delivering DTC-specific diagnostic and repair information to service personnel will shorten the time between an initial diagnosis and a completed repair, reducing downtime for service.

Mitchell 1’s Repair-Connect.net Web-based application uses DTCs to gather information required to fix a problem. Seven tabs presented in the Repair-Connect program contain details specific to the reported DTC, such as component location, connector views, removal and installation, wiring diagrams and specifications. The new interface will enable Noregon to capture and pass a VIN and DTC into Mitchell 1’s Repair-Connect.net and retrieve related service information, including a description of the trouble code, wiring diagrams, component connector views, electrical component locations, testing, removal and installation procedures, and specifications.

Noregon’s JPRO Commercial Fleet Products are PC- and adapter-based in-shop diagnostic solutions. JPRO works with engine, transmission and braking systems. The diagnostics software displays vehicle faults, and allows the user to record data for playback; view and chart engine parameters; print reports; and launch OEM software and troubleshooting guides. In addition to Class 7 and 8 vehicles, Noregon offers JPRO Commercial Fleet Products for medium-duty platforms, including Ford E-Series and F-Series trucks (model years 2004 and newer) and GM Class 2-6 trucks for model years 2002-2011. A broad spectrum of vehicle makes and models will be added throughout 2012.

Visit www.mitchell1.com/CommercialVehicleGroup/home.asp and www.noregon.com for more information.

Trending Now

Among the resources available to fleet managers in our industry are shows and conferences that offer unique opportunities to gather valuable information. These events are also a window into the most pressing concerns and topics of interest to fleets.

At The Work Truck Show 2012 in Indianapolis, a record-setting 10,408 attendees and 563 exhibitors provided just such an opportunity. Showcasing Class 1-8 trucks, chassis, bodies, components and accessories, more than 120 of the exhibiting companies launched at least 140 new products, including alternative fuel systems, which are featured elsewhere in this issue.

The Work Truck Show was also the site of the Green Truck Summit where technical experts, government officials, industry leaders and early adopter fleet managers came together to unveil recent developments in sustainable technologies and new commercial truck applications.

Also a record event with 772 attendees, The Work Truck Show event was coupled with a Green Truck Ride-and-Drive featuring 21 commercial vehicles that incorporate advances in hybrid technology and alternative fuel applications, including CNG, propane, battery-electric, extended-range electric, ultra-clean biodiesel, bi-fuel CNG, series and parallel electric hybrids, and hydraulic hybrids.

As we go to press we’re getting ready to attend the NAFA Institute & Expo where fleet professionals will be on hand to network and see the latest services and products available for their operations. They will also take part in more than 65 educational programs and hear from several key speakers.

Next up we’re attending the Electric Utility Fleet Managers Conference (EUFMC), which continues to attract record numbers of fleet executives from investor-owned electric utilities, electric cooperatives and electrical contractors from across the U.S. and Canada, as well as representatives of equipment and service suppliers. The annual exhibition at EUFMC features more than 75 displays where fleet managers can meet with 250+ representatives from more than 95 manufacturers and service providers.

EUFMC is also a perfect example of how close cooperation between fleet managers and suppliers is mutually beneficial. The conference is an opportunity for manufacturers to share product ideas with customers, and for fleet managers to make their wishes and concerns known so better solutions can be developed. The sharing of best practices is also a hallmark of EUFMC, which includes roundtables where fleet representatives and suppliers can exchange information and discuss mutual concerns.

Staying in the loop can be a full-time task for today’s already busy fleet executives. Thanks to industry associations and their active members, however, it is that much easier to see what’s trending now, and to learn as much as possible in a short amount of time about the solutions available to address the industry’s most pressing needs.

Seth Skydel
Editor 

EUFMC-2

Proven Practices

During the 2011 Electric Utility Fleet Managers Conference, fleet managers detailed the successful approaches they’re employing for acquisition, maintenance and parts strategies in their operations.

Baltimore Gas & Electric
An affiliate of Constellation Energy, Baltimore Gas & Electric (BGE) provides electric and gas service in a territory of about 2,400 square miles surrounding the Baltimore metropolitan area of central Maryland. BGE Fleet Services, with 80 employees, including 46 technicians, manages a fleet of more than 1,500 vehicles and 400 pieces of equipment. The operation has a central shop at its headquarters location where all major repairs, new vehicle preparation and maintenance on local units is performed, as well as seven shops located throughout its service territory.

“Our replacement cycle has been based on economic life, the evaluation of units, user input and a review of maintenance records,” said Gill Nichols, supervisor, fleet engineering. “Budgetary and business cycle constraints can limit replacement activity, but our annual replacement plan is developed within current financial constraints and with the concurrence of users.”

BGE, Nichols reported, recently completed a five-year leasing contract. “A finance evaluation proved that leasing was less expensive than buying for BGE’s cost structure,” he said, “so we established a contract with a funding source and a separate services provider.”

BGE Fleet Services, Nichols explained, develops standardized specifications for each vehicle and equipment type in the utility’s operation. “A user-needs review identifies any necessary departure from standard offerings,” he added, “and modifications are controlled through an engineering review and user management approval of costs.”

Alliance agreements with major component suppliers have been established by BGE Fleet Services to provide for lower parts pricing and on-site training sessions. “The agreements cover most chassis, body and aerial components, and equipment types,” Nichols related. “These partnerships also allow us to collaborate with our suppliers on new product development and to serve as testing ground for new technologies.”

Preventive maintenance (PM) on the BGE fleet is usually based on manufacturers’ schedules, although BGE Fleet Services does modify schedules based on mileage, engine hours or fuel usage if those parameters are observed to be out of range. In addition, the fleet’s managers conduct data analysis of vehicles and equipment showing any higher than scheduled usage. In use is AssetWorks FleetAnywhere software. “We’ve been using this system for over 10 years,” Nichols stated. “It provides data on historic cost of repairs, labor hours, fuel usage, ownership costs and parts expenses, which we also use for setting charge-back rates and for benchmarking our operation.”

Maintaining the BGE fleet is a team of PM trainees, PM technicians, master technicians and senior master technicians. “We established these roles so our technicians can move from job to job based on attaining required certifications, meeting established performance standards and job qualifications, and demonstrating the ability to perform required tasks,” Nichols said.

“Our technicians are provided with information about what is required to advance and are given opportunities to advance at their own pace,” Nichols continued. “Manpower utilization in our shops is planned on a monthly basis using estimated repair activity and PM schedules. Shop-to-shop labor transfers are made to manage spikes in workload, vacations and long-term medical absences.”

BGE Fleet Services makes extensive training opportunities available to its technicians. An established program for new hires encompasses seasoned workers as well as high school graduates. The highly structured program teaches shop functions, computer systems, safe work practices, tool and equipment use, and basic elements of maintenance and repair work. Trainees are instructed daily on how to perform PMs and other repairs by working in the fleet’s central shop with a senior master technician.

Manufacturer training sessions are also provided to trainees and all technicians to familiarize them with new models, systems and functions of vehicles and equipment. Additionally, a contracted training program has been developed to provide basic through advanced training in electronics, braking systems, engines, hydraulic systems and other areas.

BGE Fleet Services has also worked with all of its major suppliers to establish warranty repair agreements, enabling the fleet’s technicians to perform repairs on covered items. “We actively manage the warranty recovery process, set annual recovery goals and include this in our bonus performance award program,” Nichols related.

Parts inventories are managed closely at BGE Fleet Services. Established through competitive bidding, contracts are in place for high volume items using specialty suppliers where applicable and larger suppliers for the majority of stocked parts. The fleet’s Operations & Support Unit monitors and manages inventories, orders stock parts, and collaborates with shop personnel to add or delete parts from stock based on usage patterns. The group also assists in ordering specialty or long-lead items.

Successful acquisition, maintenance and parts programs, Nichols pointed out, are the result of finding effective solutions on a consistent basis. “We address short-term issues through teams composed of members from all areas within the department and customers,” he explained.

“We also hold an annual planning conference to develop short- and long-term goals and initiatives for the department,” Nichols concluded. “Prior to the conference, feedback is solicited from all members of the department about improvement ideas or suggestions, and identification of problems or issues that need to be addressed. Department management and leadership use the responses to formulate strategies to improve performance, address issues and develop goals to pursue.”

Progress Energy
Covering a territory that encompasses 34,000 square miles across North Carolina and South Carolina and 20,000 square miles in Florida, Progress Energy serves more than 3 million customers. Its fleet of nearly 3,900 vehicles and equipment is maintained in 26 regional garages by 124 employees, including 88 technicians, along with supervisors, administrators and other support personnel.

The Progress Energy fleet includes 2,500+ light-, medium- and heavy-duty vehicles from a variety of manufacturers. Also in the operation are more than 1,300 pieces of equipment including trailers and off-road excavating equipment.

“We have a $50 million annual operational and maintenance budget,” reported Gary Butler, Progress Energy Carolinas manager of fleet assets and maintenance. “About one-third of that covers vehicle ownership, one-third is for maintenance and the balance is for fuel.”

Each of those cost areas is then the focus of efforts by the fleet’s managers. Equipment utilization is reviewed periodically to ensure proper allocation of the fleet, and vehicles can be moved after a review of job duties, equipment sizing and other considerations.

Current replacement cycles for the Progress Energy fleet are five years or 125,000 miles for light-duty vehicles, seven to eight years for medium-duty models and 11 years for heavy-duty units. Service buckets are usually replaced after four to five years and trailers in the operation last 20 years.

The Progress Energy maintenance operation handles 93 to 95 percent of the fleet’s maintenance and repair needs in-house, including using 20 traveling preventive maintenance trucks. Day and night shifts also complete dielectric testing on aerial units.

Shops are manufacturer-approved warranty repair centers for GM, Ford, Dodge, Freightliner, International, Sterling, Western Star, Altec and Terex. Warranty recovery utilizing the services of a third-party warranty administrator totaled $45,000 in 2010 and was projected to rise to $75,000 to $100,000 in 2011, Butler reported.

About 5 to 7 percent of the Progress Energy fleet’s maintenance and repair work is outsourced, including tire work and alignments, windshield and body repairs, automatic transmission work and hydraulic cylinder rebuilding.

“We occasionally outsource maintenance due to workload and logistics considerations, and when we identify savings opportunities,” Butler related. “Current maintenance intervals have been set based on regulatory and manufacturer requirements. Preventive maintenance intervals can also vary depending on make, model and application while costs can be affected by hourly labor rates for technicians, which are dependent on progression in salary and other variables.

“Our preventive maintenance intervals are also based on oil sampling,” Butler added. “The data indicates we could extend the intervals, but we established a conservative approach and set mileage limits to ensure that extremely excessive mileage does not occur.”

Parts supplier agreements in place at Progress Energy are resulting in cost savings. Costs are kept in check using volume pricing and rebates, centralized billing and reporting and tracking capabilities.

Progress Energy’s fleet managers also pay close attention to fuel costs and use the information to bolster fuel consumption awareness, including idling practices, routes, weight and stop/start operations. Fuel hedging serves as insurance against steep price increases.

An all-around approach, Butler noted, is minimizing rising vehicle costs at Progress Energy. “We have vehicles and equipment, and driver teams that address issues like utilization, maintenance and fuel consumption,” he explained. “Management system and benchmarking data supports our cost reduction initiatives. In the last 10 years, we’ve held costs flat and absorbed labor increases.”

Oklahoma Gas & Electric
Serving 765,000 customers in a 30,000-square-mile service territory in central Oklahoma and western Arkansas, Oklahoma Gas & Electric (OGE) fields a fleet of more than 2,400 pieces of equipment, including 1,300 light-, medium- and heavy-duty vehicles. The fleet is maintained in 11 garages, including one central facility in each of the utility’s larger districts that supports at least one smaller district and/or power plant.

OGE employs 23 mechanics and three garage supervisors as well as eight support personnel in its maintenance operation. Senior mechanics are assigned to one-person shops, mobile service units or as lead technicians in larger facilities. The staff also includes journey and apprentice mechanics as well as interns.

“Many of our garages are one-person operations,” said Herb Kramer, fleet maintenance supervisor. “We move larger jobs to external sources or to our main shop, or we move resources to accomplish the work. We do not want the one mechanic in a facility to be overwhelmed or to create a backlog with a larger time-consuming job. All but three mechanics work from 3 to 11:30 p.m.,” he added, “which means if there is a problem during the day it is repaired that night and the unit is back in service in the morning.

“We handle 75 to 80 percent of the work our fleet requires internally,” Kramer continued, “and we outsource work that we feel we cannot handle as cost effectively as an outside supplier. That may have to do with our available resources, but in all cases we limit the number of suppliers we use.”

At OGE, Kramer reported, all bodywork, windshield repair and virtually all tire work is outsourced. In addition, the fleet outsources 80 percent of light-duty vehicle warranty work, 10 percent of preventive maintenance on those vehicles, and 70 percent of repairs and larger issues found during PMs on light-duty models. Dealers servicing the fleet are required to provide pickup and delivery services.

“We’re very focused on vehicle inspection,” Kramer stated. “Engine oil is sampled at every drain interval and hydraulic oil is tested once per year unless contamination is found. Every time a vehicle is in a shop we try to correct anything we find. We created a checklist so mechanics know what to focus on and we started requiring shop supervisors to check 10 to 20 percent of all work.”

During and between routine PMs, OGE shops are also focusing closely on vehicles and equipment with higher utilization, and those with harder duty cycles. “When we find high-mileage newer vehicles,” Kramer noted, “we move them to areas with lower utilization. That helps us stay on track for replacement cycles and reduces repair costs.”

For parts, OGE is moving from one to three suppliers. “The theory was that we could do a better job of managing costs with one supplier,” Kramer related, “but that made it hard to compare, and having one pipeline increased downtime. To reduce downtime we allowed mechanics to buy locally if it meant they could get the vehicle back in service, and that drove up costs. With our new arrangement we realized a 20 percent reduction in parts costs.”

OGE’s other practices are paying off as well. A proactive approach to maintenance and repairs has reduced downtime and breakdowns, cutting the number of service calls from more than 100 to fewer than 10 per month. Increased uptime, measured as mean time between repairs, has improved.

“That was partially from upgrading equipment and moving high-use vehicles to lower-use areas,” Kramer said. “It’s also a result of better diagnostics and parts availability, as well as keeping mechanics focused on completing a job by giving them the responsibility to manage their own schedules.

“When we started down this path our costs started to rise,” Kramer continued, “because we were fixing things that were broken but never reported. Over time we started seeing our efforts pay off. Today we’ve realized a $700,000 drop in maintenance costs, and a reduction in annual tire expenses from over $950,000 to $550,000.”

Critical to this success, according to Kramer, is meeting with major vendors three or four times per year, and having information on the fleet’s operation and analyzing that data often. OGE also uses the benchmarking services of Utilimarc.

“We measure everything possible and question it regularly,” Kramer stated, “including mean time to repair data, and repair costs for internal and outsourced work. We also evaluate warranty and utilization. Overall, we’re focusing on reducing our annual budget from a variable $11 to $15 million to a lower and steady $9.5 million per year.”

Editor’s Note: The annual Electric Utility Fleet Managers Conference will be held June 3-6, 2012, in Williamsburg, Va. For more information, visit www.eufmc.com.

Work-Truck-Show-Web

The Work Truck Show

North America’s largest gathering of vocational trucks and transportation equipment, The Work Truck Show 2012 at the Indiana Convention Center in Indianapolis features more than 550 exhibitors showcasing Classes 1-8 trucks, chassis, bodies, components and accessories.

Thousands of work truck professionals, including fleet managers, equipment buyers, maintenance personnel, manufacturers, distributors and dealers attend the annual Work Truck Show to interact with peers, meet with suppliers, get answers to technical questions and visit exhibits. Industry suppliers also use the event to introduce new product innovations.

Former President George W. Bush will be the keynote speaker at The Work Truck Show 2012. President Bush will speak at the President’s Breakfast and NTEA Annual Meeting, offering insights into the challenges facing our nation in the 21st century and other timely issues.

NTEA Convention
The Work Truck Show 2012 is held in conjunction with the 48th NTEA Annual Convention. Established in 1964, NTEA, the Association for the Work Truck Industry, represents nearly 1,600 companies that manufacture, distribute, install, sell and repair commercial trucks, truck bodies, truck equipment, trailers and accessories. Buyers of work trucks and the major commercial truck chassis manufacturers also belong to the association.

The NTEA Convention serves as the educational component of The Work Truck Show, featuring more than 60 educational sessions for owners, managers and employees from truck equipment suppliers, upfitters, fleet managers and truck purchasers. Session topics on the agenda include:

• State of the Industry Overview – The NTEA Perspective
• Changing of the Guard: Millennials and Generational Differences in the Workplace
• Demystifying Weight Distribution and Payload Calculations for Work Trucks
• Government Regulatory Implications for the Work Truck Industry
• Learning to Avoid Costly Truck Frame Modification Errors
• What is the Future Economic Landscape for the Work Truck Industry?
• Optimizing Work Truck Body and Equipment Specifications
• Why Should I Care About Vehicle Certification?
• Build Your People Strategy First
• Ensuring Your Next Truck Chassis Matches the Job Requirements
• The Future of Fleet Operations
• The Ins and Outs of Lean for the Truck Equipment Industry
• Making Vehicle Investment Decisions Using Life-Cycle Cost Analysis
• Old Rules/New Tools: Staying People-Focused Using Today’s Technology
• Spec’ing Your Next Truck Powertrain for Optimum Efficiency & Performance
• The Next Generation of Work Truck Telematics

Chassis updates are on the NTEA agenda. Participating truck manufacturers include:
• Chevrolet & GMC Commercial Trucks
• Ford Commercial Trucks
• Freightliner Custom Chassis Corporation
• Freightliner Trucks
• Hino Trucks
• International Truck
• Isuzu Commercial Truck of America
• Kenworth Truck Company
• Mack Trucks
• Mitsubishi Fuso Truck of America
• Nissan North America
• Peterbilt Motors Company
• Ram Trucks
• Western Star Trucks

Green Truck Summit
Jointly produced by NTEA and CALSTART, the Green Truck Summit is also held in conjunction with The Work Truck Show. Technical experts, government officials, industry leaders and early adopter fleet managers come together at the Green Truck Summit to unveil recent developments in sustainable technologies and new commercial truck applications. Presenters share practical advice on fuel efficiency, firsthand information on building green fleet programs, and critical advances in engine and fuel technology.

United States Secretary of Energy Steven Chu, Ph.D., will give the keynote address at the 2012 Green Truck Summit. Dr. Chu is a distinguished scientist and co-winner of the 1997 Nobel Prize for Physics. As Secretary of Energy he is charged with helping implement President Obama’s agenda to invest in clean energy, reduce U.S. dependence on foreign oil, address the global climate crisis and create new jobs.

Educational sessions at the Green Truck Summit include:
• Trends in Work Truck Technologies and Fuels covering upcoming changes that will affect the vocational truck industry, new clean technologies and fuels, and new vehicle efficiency and emissions standards.
• Gaseous Fuels: A Successful Alternative
• Work Truck Electrification: Leveraging the Ultimate Clean Fuel
• Watching the Bottom Line: Technologies for Increasing Fuel Efficiency and Eliminating Fuel Waste

Roadway to Fuel Independence and Air Quality Improvement in North America and Globally will be the subject of an address by Russell Musgrove, managing director of FedEx Express. Musgrove will provide insights based on his global company’s experience using sustainable technologies.

Recently announced regulations (scheduled to take effect in 2016) and details about how companies can prepare to meet them will be the focus of A New Generation of Clean Work Trucks: Understanding the EPA and NHTSA Joint Greenhouse Gas and Fuel Efficiency Standards for Work Trucks by a panel of experts from EPA and NHTSA.

Green Truck Summit sessions showcase new technology and provide information on reducing fuel consumption, improving fleet management, comparing clean technology options, funding clean vehicles and more. Green truck technology is also highlighted in the CALSTART Clean Technologies and Fuels Pavilion. In addition, exhibitors with products that improve fuel utilization, are environmentally friendly, use recycled materials and/or support environmentally sustainable practices are profiled throughout the hall as part of the Green Product Showcase.

Green Truck Ride-and-Drive
A popular highlight of The Work Truck Show is the Green Truck Ride-and-Drive. Featuring 21 commercial vehicles that incorporate advances in hybrid technology and alternative fuel applications, the Ride-and-Drive will include a variety of work trucks, including cargo and service vans, pickup trucks, dump trucks, shuttle buses, walk-in vans, tree-trimming trucks, utility trucks, box trucks, cutaways and more.

This year’s event includes an equally wide range of environmentally friendly drive systems, including CNG, propane, battery-electric, extended range electric, ultra-clean biodiesel, bi-fuel CNG, electric hybrids (series and parallel), and hydraulic hybrids. Some of the vehicles will feature lightweight and aerodynamic technologies. Equipment demonstrations of electric PTOs and similar technologies also will take place.

Cutting-edge technologies and energy-efficient vehicles available for ride and drive attendees are being provided by:
• Altec Industries
• BAE Systems
• Cummins Crosspoint
• Electric Vehicles International
• Freightliner Custom Chassis Corporation
• Freightliner Trucks
• Hino Trucks
• IMPCO Automotive
• International Truck
• Isuzu Commercial Truck of America
• Kenworth Truck Company
• Knapheide Manufacturing Company
• Leggett & Platt Commercial Vehicle Products
• Lightning Hybrids
• Motiv Power Systems
• Peterbilt Motors Company
• Propane Education & Research Council (PERC)
• Ram Trucks
• Reading Truck Body
• Roush CleanTech
• Smith Electric Vehicles

Work Truck Show App
Now available for most mobile devices, The Work Truck Show App enables users to access the show floor plan, browse educational sessions, view and schedule appointments, and find exhibitors that are featuring products in the New Product Spotlight and Green Product Showcase programs. Scan the QR code at http://www.ntea.com/worktruckshow/index.aspx?id=25950 or visit www.guidebook.com/getit with a smartphone or device.

Industry Affair
The Work Truck Show 2012 is produced by NTEA and is supported by leading organizations:

• American Public Works Association (www.apwa.net)
• Association of Indiana Counties (www.indianacounties.org)
• CALSTART (www.calstart.org)
• Canadian Transportation Equipment Association (www.ctea.ca)
• Clean Cities – U.S. Dept. of Energy (www1.eere.energy.gov/cleancities)
• Clean Vehicle Education Foundation (www.cleanvehicle.org)
• Green Truck Association (www.greentruckassociation.com)
• Heavy Duty Representatives Association (www.hdra.org)
• Indiana Association of County Commissioners (www.indianacountycommissioners.com)
• Indiana Association of Plumbing-Heating-Cooling Contractors (www.iaphcc.com)
• NAFA Fleet Management Association (www.nafa.org)
• National Alternative Fuels Training Consortium (www.naftc.wvu.edu)
• NTEA (www.ntea.com)
• Natural Gas Vehicles for America (www.ngvamerica.org)
• Ohio Contractors Association (www.ohiocontractors.org)
• Ohio Nursery & Landscape Association (www.onla.org)
• Propane Education & Research Council (www.propanecouncil.org)
• Rocky Mountain Fleet Management Association (www.rmfma.org)
• Service Specialists Association (www.truckservice.org)
• Snow & Ice Management Association (www.sima.org)

 

Maintenance-5-Web

Ensuring Fleet Readiness

Improving communication and access to information during service events leads to less downtime.

Whether you outsource some or all of your fleet’s maintenance and repair work or handle everything in-house, an efficient and accurate exchange of pertinent information is vital to success. One solution that is steadily growing in use among fleets is the Web-based Decisiv Service Management Platform.

The Decisiv platform was designed to connect fleet managers with internal and external service locations. “The platform pulls together historically separate silos of information and places them within a single Web portal,” explained Dick Hyatt, president of Decisiv. “With the platform, fleet, service location, mobile service and call center personnel can all share information and effectively communicate throughout a service event. The result is the ability to save hours per service event, getting trucks back in service faster.”

The volume of service business handled on the Decisiv platform in the past two years topped 630,000 cases. Continued growth in fleet usage has brought the number of assets from more than 175 fleets loaded onto the platform to more than 150,000.

Decisiv also continues to expand the capabilities of the platform to more readily integrate telematics devices and a growing scope of applications from third-party developers. For example, the platform is enabled to provide real-time alerts and information from telematics devices. Included are location, mileage, engine hours, fault code and other relevant data, which is then used to open service events and initiate requests to service locations. In addition, telematics driven in-context information is used to trigger repair and maintenance operations, and to populate the platform’s date-/time-stamped electronic folder with fault codes and vehicle information.

“Fleet managers are inundated with information from multiple portals, websites and information sources,” said Hyatt. “By seamlessly integrating with third-party and OEM applications, including accessing real-time information from telematics devices, the Decisiv platform provides an in-context service initiation and management solution that greatly simplifies the service management process.”

The Decisiv platform is now in use at more than 500 service locations as MVASIST at Volvo Trucks North America and Mack Trucks dealers, as the WheelTime Customer Service Platform at WheelTime Network Detroit Diesel-Allison distributors, and as the Decisiv Service Management Platform at Freightliner dealers and other facilities. To learn more, visit www.decisivconnect.com.

Facilitating Service Operations
Properly specified, installed and maintained shop lifts can enable technicians to work on vehicles more productively.

The first consideration for fleet managers when choosing vehicle lifts is the type of services a facility performs. Available from several manufacturers are different types of lifts used in truck maintenance facilities.

Another important consideration is whether the lift has received certification by the Automotive Lift Institute (ALI). The industry association founded by vehicle lift manufacturers promotes the safe design, construction, installation, operation and maintenance of lifts, including those used to service commercial vehicles.

ALI testing includes verification of the structural integrity of a lift’s systems and components, proper function of its controls and load-holding devices, proper lowering speeds and overload protection. ALI has also developed standards covering a lift owner’s responsibilities regarding operation, inspection and maintenance, as well as a standard on the installation and service of vehicle lifts. Visit the ALI website at www.autolift.org for more information.

Lift Choices
There are several different types of vehicle lifts based on design, including:

In-ground lifts that raise the vehicle by its axles and retract when not in use occupy less floor space, ease the movement of vehicles in service areas and provide excellent access to vehicles during service.

Two-post lifts provide easy access to the vehicle’s undercarriage and drivetrain. Featuring two sets of lifting arms attached to two columns used to lift a vehicle at designated points on the frame, two-post lifts are offered in symmetrical designs that are preferred for use on large vehicles.

Four-post lifts in a range of lengths and lifting capacities, and with adjustable runway track widths to accommodate most vehicles, are often among the fastest and simplest to use because no setup is required to drive the vehicle onto the runways and raise it to a comfortable working height. These lifts can also be fitted with rolling jacks to lift the front or rear wheels off the runways.

Parallelogram lifts include surface mount, surface with recessed mount and flush mount designs. Featuring runways that are raised using a parallelogram motion, these lifts can also be fitted with rolling jacks.

Mobile column lifts link four or six portable columns that are rolled to a vehicle and connected using control cables. Highly portable, these lifts are used to turn open space into inspection or service areas.

Pit lifts expand maintenance and repair capabilities of service pits. Types of pit lifts include floor-running, with wheels so they can be rolled anywhere in the pit, rail-mounted that move along a rail system at the bottom of the pit, and suspended pit lifts that ride on rails installed at the top of the pit.

Placement, Maintenance, Training
Vehicle lift selection and placement should also be part of the shop planning process. Each type and model of lift’s footprint and the turning radius and length of vehicles being serviced in the facility should be considered.

To keep lifts functioning safely and properly, manufacturers advise that fleets follow maintenance and adjustment recommendations. Lubrication is especially important for maintaining lift performance and longevity. Annual inspections and repairs, such as seal replacement or pressure testing, should be performed by qualified lift service personnel.

It is also essential that technicians operating lifts know how to use them correctly. All lift manufacturers offer training materials for this purpose.

Lift Suppliers

ARI-HETRA (www.ari-hetra.com)
Products: Heavy-duty lifting systems for 48,000- to 320,000-pound loads. Drive-on models include Surface Mounted Scissor Lifts and Flush Mounted Scissor Lifts with platforms wide enough for dual-wheel vehicles.

MOHAWK LIFTS (www.mohwaklifts.com)
Products: Two-post lifts in 26,000- and 30,000-pound capacity models. Four-post lifts ranging in capacity from 19,000 to 75,000 pounds. In-ground lifts in 55,000-, 66,000-, 82,500- and 99,000-pound capacities. Mobile column-style lifts with per column capacity ratings of 12,000 to 40,000 pounds. Parallelogram lifts with capacities from 36,000 to 100,000 pounds and track lengths from 26 to 48 feet, in surface or flush mount designs.

ROTARY LIFT (www.rotarylift.com)
Products: In-ground scissor lift for any medium-duty or heavy-duty vehicle weighing up to 60,000 pounds. Mobile column hydraulic lift with adjustable wheel forks for different wheel sizes. Suspended and floor-running pit lifts. Parallelogram lift systems in capacities up to 100,000 pounds and platform lengths from 26 to 48 feet. Any of these models can now be ordered with a new wash bay package featuring marine-grade paint and stainless steel feet to resist corrosion caused by constant exposure to water, grime and chemicals. Rotary Lift’s wash bay lift also includes an ALI-certified stainless steel control panel.

Jenny Electric Two-Stage, Horizontal-Tank Stationary Air Compressors
Electric two-stage, horizontal-tank stationary air compressors from Jenny Products Inc. displace between 9.1 and 107 CFM at 175 PSI. The 22 belt-driven models in the product line include:

• 2- and 3-HP; 60- and 80-gallon tanks; 9.1 and 13.4 CFM
• 5-, 7.5- and 10-HP; 60- to 120-gallon tanks; 18.3 to 43.6 CFM
• 15-HP; 120- or 240-gallon tanks; 72.4 CFM
• 20-HP; 120- or 240-gallon tanks; 92.6 CFM
• 25-HP; 120- or 240-gallon tanks; 107 CFM

The Jenny compressors feature a heavy-duty, two-stage cast-iron compressor pump; powder-coated, ASME-certified tank; manual tank drain; tank gauge; large canister intake filter with replaceable filter elements; and a pressure-relief safety valve. A large flywheel provides for extra cooling and easier startup, and a directional air shroud also helps reduce pump temperatures.

To help maintain consistent pressure levels, an automatic start/stop control with a pressure unloader is standard on the company’s two-stage series. A constant-run feature can be installed for operations requiring a continuous, heavy flow of compressed air, and a dual-control option is offered. Visit www.jennyproductsinc.com for more.

Utility Fleet Professional

360 Memorial Drive, Suite 10, Crystal Lake, IL 60014 | 815.459.1796

KNOWLEDGE, INSIGHT & STRATEGY FOR UTILITY FLEET LEADERS

Utility Fleet Professional is produced by Utility Business Media, Inc.   View Capabilities Statement

Get the Utility Fleet Professional Digital Edition App
Get the Utility Fleet Professional Digital Edition App

Get the iP Digital Edition App


© All rights reserved.
Back to Top